Tara Brach - Authentic Thanks Giving (2018-11-21)
Episode Date: November 24, 2018Authentic Thanks Giving (2018-11-21) - How do we awaken our natural capacities for gratitude and generosity? This talk explores the pathways of honest presence and purposeful cultivation, and offers s...everal reflections that guide us in contacting and expressing our love. Your support enables us to continue to offer these talks and meditations freely. If you value them, I hope you will consider offering a donation at this time at www.tarabrach.com/donation/. With gratitude and love, Tara
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Greetings. We offer these podcasts freely and your support really makes a difference.
To make a donation, please visit tarabrock.com.
Namaste and welcome.
There's a Sufi wise man who also plays the fool. His name is Milanazardine.
And in one of the stories about him, he had lost his wife's bracelet and he's frantic and panicking.
He says, God, help me find this.
I'll do anything.
I'll give half of my week's earnings to the poor.
I'll do anything.
Just help me.
And then he sees it behind a cushion.
And he says, never mind, God, I've already found it.
That's the beginning of my Thanksgiving talk.
Yeah, so each year, the night before Thanksgiving,
I put together a talk that in some way looks at these,
qualities of the heart as we awaken of a natural generosity and a sense of gratitude.
And so when I was approaching this class, I'd actually forgotten that this was Thanksgiving
week. And I had a whole different talk I was cooking up on self-honesty. Then I somehow
looked at the calendar and figured it out. And my first reaction was a real resistance, like,
no, I got to do a talk on gratitude.
Then I processed it and because I was in, you know, my whole mode was on honesty, I thought
I'd share with you my process on it, if you'll bear with me, which was I had a kind of cynicism
come up and a bit of an aversion that there's so much about this contemporary Thanksgiving
that's actually quite contrary to the heart qualities that were really.
celebrating. So I felt this kind of anger come up in me about a bit of the false pretensions
that are images of history and really the genocide, the devastation towards indigenous people
and how it continues on today and other non-dominant parts of our population. And this whole sense
of receiving a harvest when the white Europeans came over here and plundered the earth,
you know, destroyed the ecosystems and so on.
And then of course, Thanksgiving goes hand in hand with this idea of a turkey and how few connect the dots that what we're eating in our banquet.
You know, these turkeys were hatched and lived there six months.
They live for six months and then they're slaughtered.
In the wild, turkeys live for ten years, you know, but six months and they're in this shed without light.
and they're drug to gain weight
and so much so that a lot of them break their legs
anyway, it's a horrific thing
and so the whole, as you get it
my mind was just going through
oh my God, Thanksgiving
and then all of a sudden I said,
okay, be with that
and I felt this real sorrow,
just sorrow about the shadow side of it
and so then I was saying,
okay, be with the sorrow,
be with the sorrow, you know.
Some tenderness came up and then I just started feeling the sense of this presence,
this tenderness, just holding the sorrow.
And then I went, wow, I'm just so grateful for this practice.
Ah, gratitude.
Slipped up on me.
So gratitude and then, you know, and then I thought of you all.
And when I see you all, you know, those, I just love my community here.
IMCW community, those that gather here, and really this non-local community of just a web of people that
care and want to wake up. And then I was feeling that gratitude, wow, what an amazing thing to be
part of that. Because I feel part of it. I am nurtured by it. I know I'm in a role, but boy, it's very
much just a wonderful rich exchange. And so I was just feeling that gratitude. And I thought,
wow, I wonder if I could share this with you. And then my first thought was, oh, this is going
be a downer if I start sharing all my stuff on Thanksgiving. But I realized that, you know,
we all want to be more real. And that that's part of when the gratitude comes up, it's because
we're feeling more real and who we are. So I want to thank you for just,
being with be and being with each other and together in this path of waking up.
And so I felt full of gratitude.
I went, okay, I'm really on for putting together a talk.
And I went back to my desk.
And the first thing that showed up in my files that I thought to myself,
wow, this resonates.
I want to share it with you.
This is Mary Oliver.
And this poem is called In Praise of Craziness.
of a certain kind.
On cold evenings, my grandmother,
with ownership of half her mind,
the other half, having flown back to Bohemia,
spread newspapers over the porch floor.
So, she said,
the garden ants could crawl beneath
as under a blanket and keep warm.
And what shall I wish for for myself?
But being so struck by the lightning of years
to be like her with what is left, that loving.
To be like her with what is left, that loving.
Maybe a pause here for all of us
as we consider the season
and what makes a holiday really a holy day.
Just to close your eyes for a moment,
maybe sense yourself into the future
when a lot has fallen away
perhaps some of your
capability, some of your
cognitive capacities, your physical
what do you wish would be left?
What are the qualities of being
of who you really are
that you most in this moment
want to honor, want to cultivate,
want to bring alive?
I just sense that over these next few minutes together we'll be reflecting together on what
can evolve these heart qualities.
You can open your eyes if you'd like.
I think of it as two pathways.
One pathway of awakening the heart is pure presence with whatever's here in the moment.
So if for me whatever was here in the moment was cynicism, anger or version, just you start
where you are. So we start with where we are. And it takes kind of being alert because often where
we are feels like we shouldn't be there and it's wrong. And there's lag time for us. We kind of get
caught in it. But the sooner we realize, oh, this is the portal right here. Just be with this.
And then we pause. Then a very precious kind of presence starts waking up. But it requires
pausing. Typically, if we look at our lives, we are tumbling forward into what's next. And mentally
we have a map and our map really has this trajectory of what we're on our way to. Have you
noticed that how much we're on our way to something? This pathway back to the heart means that we
catch on like, oh, I can't be on my way. I need to come right here.
So there's that kind of stop, be right here, make a clearing in the dense forest of your life.
Remember that line?
So we learn to stop chasing after things, stop racing forward in our mind.
Now, some of you might remember FOMO.
That's the fear of missing out, you know, the way we're just constantly racing after things.
I'd like to read you a very short piece called Jomo, which is the thing.
the joy of missing out. Oh, the joy of missing out when the world begins to shout and rush
towards that shining thing, the latest bit of mental bling, trying to have it, see it, do it,
the anxious clamoring in need, this restless hungry thing to feed. Instead, you feel the loveliness,
the pleasure of your emptiness. You spurn the treasure on the shelf in favor of your peaceful.
self, without regret, without a doubt, oh, the joy of missing out.
So it's a fun way of saying, we stop that busyness if we want to wake up the heart
because all the qualities we most cherish come from presence.
Take a moment again, if you will, just to close your eyes and listen.
When we start being here, we can listen to the moment.
We can listen inwardly and get intimate with our inner life.
We can listen to each other.
From an anonymous writer, isn't it true that to get to know the beauty and majesty of a tree,
you have to be quiet and rest in the shade of the tree.
Don't you have to stand under the tree?
to understand anyone
you need to stand under them for a little while
this means you have to listen to them
and be quiet and take in who they are
as if from under as if from inside out
and so as we enter
this season of holy days
creating that clearing in the dense forest
you might sense
who in the next day or two
you want to understand
stand, stand under with that listening presence.
So you can appreciate.
And just imagine that in order to stand under,
you need to pause to come into that presence right here.
Our first pathway to these heart qualities
is simply stopping and bringing that listening presence alive.
The second pathway, and it's fine if you'd like to open your eyes,
The second pathway is intentionally cultivating these positive traits of gratitude and generosity.
Now, these are intrinsic.
Every one of us has this natural capacity.
It's built in to us.
But it often gets kind of covered over or twisted or torched, expresses itself in strange ways.
One of my favorite stories when I talk about this is of,
a bus of kindergartners on a school trip. And one little girl brings a handful of peanuts up to the
driver and he's surprised and thinks, oh, she must have thought I was hungry and just really touched.
Thanks her. Well, 10 minutes later, she comes up again with this other handful and he's thinking,
oh my gosh, these children, they're just so generous. Happens the third time. He says,
honey, you and your friends, you can share and enjoy them. And she says, oh, no, no, no, we just
like sucking the chocolate off of them. So our generosity is not always full-blown or whole-hearted,
but it's there. But when our survival brain gets really activated, okay? When our survival brain's
really on, in other words, fight, flight, freeze, then it closes down. We lose access to generosity
and to gratitude. And it happens in two ways. There's a sense that
we're going to miss out on something that's the grasping part of the survival brain.
I need, I want.
There's not enough.
And then we aren't able to be in that grateful mode or generous mode.
And it happens also in the sense that there's something bad that's going to happen around
the corner.
And then we're so wrapped up in defending ourselves, protecting ourselves, worrying, planning
that we're not there to receive the moment.
We're just not able to enjoy.
Now, often that something bad has to do with,
there's something wrong with me or something wrong with you,
and then we get even tighter
and we're unable to enjoy our lives.
I think Garrison Kuehler said it wonderfully
when he said, my ancestors were Puritans from England.
They arrived here in 1648 in the hope of finding greater restrictions
than were permissible.
under English law at that time.
So we get tight.
One of the biggest ways that our survival brain takes control
is that we feel like we have to control other people.
And you can think in your life if there's anybody
that you want them to behave in a certain way,
you want them to be different,
that in the moments that you're wanting them to be different,
you can't be appreciate.
that flow of generosity and gratitude can't be there.
There's one story that always comes to mind around Thanksgiving
where this elderly man in Phoenix calls his son in New York and says,
I hate to ruin your day, but your mother and I are divorcing,
45 years of misery enough, can't handle anymore.
And the son screams and, Pop, what are you talking about?
about and the father says, nope, we can't stand the sight of each other any longer.
He says, we're sick and tired of each other, and I'm sick of talking about this.
So call your sister in Chicago and just tell her.
He hangs up.
The son calls his sister in Chicago, and she freaks out.
So she calls Phoenix and she screams at her father.
You're not getting divorced.
Don't do a single thing until I get there.
I'm calling my brother back.
We'll both be there tomorrow.
But until then, do you hear me?
Don't do a thing.
She hangs up.
The old man hangs up his phone and turns to his wife.
Okay, they're coming for Thanksgiving and they're paying their own way.
This is just a bit of how the survival brain can interfere with these qualities of the heart.
So for the remainder of our time, I'd like to, and we'll do some practice together,
talk about active ways that we can cultivate the trait of gratitude.
like just be in that habit of oh wow
taking it in and appreciating and of generosity
I think of them as utterly inseparable by the way
that gratitudes when we're breathing and taking in
and letting ourselves really receive the mystery and the beauty
and the sweetness that's here
and generosity as that flow through where there's just naturally this breathing out
where we're just naturally giving out out of care
So there's a misunderstanding really about generosity, the shadow side, which is people who are
always giving, but it's a kind of a giving that others won't love me or won't value me unless I give.
It's kind of an addiction to helping.
And for those people, it's more breathe in, take it in, take it in, take it in, let it in,
you know, not trusting they're good enough.
So we're going to look at how we can intend.
intentionally cultivate gratitude because it's a practice.
There's lots of gratitude research out there because it's so good for our bodies and our
spirit and, you know, it shows over and over again that even doing once a week a kind of
gratitude list can lift depression. My husband Jonathan and I have a practice. We get together
to meditate and then do a kind of relational meditation twice a week. And we schedule it
because if we don't schedule it, stuff happens. So twice a week we actually formally sit down
and we sit together silently for 20 minutes, a half an hour, and then we have a several-part
meditation we do out loud. The first part is to say, well, what are you grateful for? And we say,
you know, things were grateful for to each other.
And I often notice that a lot like doing this Thanksgiving talk, my first thing is,
well, I'm just not in the mood right now. I'm not feeling grateful for, why should I invent what I'm
great, you know, that kind of feeling. But I find every time is that as I start naming
and as Enra's head, that it's kind of an outside in. I'm faking it and then it
then I start realizing, yeah, I really am grateful for that.
I am grateful for this puppy, my little dog who's sitting right here.
I am grateful that I get to go and walk by the river so often,
or that I get to do what I do as life.
And then it becomes sincere.
And for me, sincerity is one of the most delicious feelings in the world.
When I really feel it's a kind of innocence.
there's no covering.
And then he does the same thing.
And then there's a real openness.
And then we can move on to the next question,
which is what's challenging right now?
And there's a lot more realness and vulnerability on that.
Then we move on to the third question,
which is the most challenging,
which is, is there anything between us and feeling really connected?
And the reason I'm sharing this is the gratitude question
sets the groundwork for a kind of realness and connection on the other questions.
It's so powerful.
There are many ways you can practice gratitude.
You can have a buddy of some sort.
Some people just have a gratitude buddy,
and at the end of the day they just agree to email three things they're grateful for.
There's no back-forth.
It doesn't have to take time,
but they keep each other accountable.
Some people have gratitude journals.
Some people just say it out loud.
Whatever works, I want to share with you one of the people in my life that has most taught me about gratitude.
And I had the good fortune to, we had a nice Skype call yesterday, his name's Dan Gottlie.
He's a very dear friend.
He is a psychologist and a writer.
and also had a radio show for a number of years.
And about 40 years ago, Dan got into a really horrific accident,
and he's been a quadriplegic for 40 years.
And he feels his body's winding down,
because that's a long time to be not able to move
and have all the different things to come along with it.
And initially, when he was first in the ICU after the accident,
he was despairing,
and he felt suicidal.
And he describes how a nurse who was tending to him
seemed pretty depressed
and came in and started talking to him
because she knew who was a psychologist.
And they talked a long time, and she left.
And the next morning she came and said,
you know, that talk, she was going through some sort of a break or something,
said, that talk changed me.
You know, I still feel miserable, but I also feel hopeful.
Like I can sense there's more life ahead.
And she walked out of the room and he said to himself, you know, if I can be of help to people,
I can live. And he chose life. And he chose life in a really deep way, so much so that when you're
with Dan, you feel more alive because he's 100% here inhabiting his life.
You know, yesterday he reminded me of one of these, there's a classic Charlie Brown cartoon
where Charlie Brown and Snoopy are sitting on this dock and they're looking out at this beautiful
lake and Charlie Brown saying, you know, someday we'll all die Snoopy.
And Snoopy says true, but on all the other days we won't.
Sudan was just reminding me of all these life moments that we can just.
choose to take in, to breathe in and appreciate.
And there's such a beauty to choosing to actively cherish these moments.
I'm reminded of one meditation master who was asked why he practices meditation.
And as a response was so, when I walk to the town square, I'll notice the tiny purple flower
by the side of the road.
So this is the gift that instead of being on our way to what's next,
we can pause for presence and actually learn consciously, purposely,
to let in the beauty and the goodness.
And it's not just letting it in.
If you want to train in gratitude,
it also means feeling it in your body.
It's the embodied quality that actually allows it to stick to be not just a passing state
but become a trait.
As many of you know, with the survival brain, we are geared to remember what is bad or wrong
and to actually sort in our environment for what's wrong.
So to shift that negativity bias, with gratitude you not only need to say, oh yeah, that's lovely,
I appreciate this, but feel it in your body.
And then it shifts from going into your brain and just kind of fluttering away to going
really into implicit memory and developing this habit of noticing what's good.
Let's practice it for a few moments.
Let's just come into whatever posture helps you.
Feel your body sitting here and breathing.
Feel your heart and begin to bring to mind
what you're grateful for in your life.
And for these next few moments,
just whisper softly, but whisper,
I'm grateful for and fell in the blanks.
And then just say it again, I'm grateful for,
and just keep saying it with whatever comes up.
I invite you to whisper it because the entrainment,
the sense of gratitude becomes stronger
if you say it out loud.
So don't be shy.
Just begin whispering, I am grateful for.
Maybe people, maybe experiences.
What are you grateful for?
And if something really feels alive, repeat it again.
And then again, let yourself choose something that really feels sincere right now,
something you're really grateful for
and repeat it several more times
slowing it down so you can feel in your body
the experience of gratitude
feel how it feels in your throat
your heart and your belly
let it fill you
and then you might just simply say thank you
for what you're grateful for
if the only prayer you ever say in your whole life
is thank you that would suffice, Meister Eckhart.
Opening your eyes as you're ready.
So this is just a couple of moments or minutes.
And the key elements again is to reflect on what you're grateful for.
It helps a lot to say it out loud.
This morning I was talking to one of my oldest friends I've known her since
home room freshman year of high school. And before hanging up, I just paused and I knew I was
going to say it. I just, and I said, you know, Susan, I'm really, really grateful to have you
in my life that we've had all these years and you're just so dear. I knew I was going to say it.
And before I said it, I was feeling it in my mind. I wasn't in my body. But as I said it,
I started crying.
Because what's already true, if you name it and bring yourself to it, it actually brings
it forth in a much more whole body and tender way.
There's a similar sensibility in this little reading from Zen Master Shimano.
He says, people often ask me how the Buddhists answer the question.
does God exist?
The other day I was walking along the river.
I was suddenly aware of the sun shining through bare trees, its warmth, its brightness,
and all this completely free, completely gratuitous, simply there for us to enjoy.
And without my knowing it, completely spontaneously, my two hands came together and I realized
I was making gashow, that's the gesture of prayer.
and it occurred to me that this is all that matters, that we can bow, take a deep bow.
Just that. Just that.
So saying thank you, are bowing, but in some way expressing the gratitude.
Okay, so that's breathing in, the taking in, and it can be taking in our appreciation of another person
or natural beauty or of a moment of connection or kindness or whatever it is.
we cherish. Then there's the generosity. There's expressing with our love by giving. And it really can
be through words of care, through a prayer, or through actions. But there are different degrees of
generosity. And it's really, this is where self-honesty comes in, because we can be generous
giving leftovers or things that don't matter too much to us or small amounts of money or
And then it can kind of be deeper, things we would enjoy for ourselves, but we just really want
another person to enjoy.
And then there's kingly giving.
That's the term in Buddhism.
And it's this wholehearted, spontaneous movement of the heart that's just out of love.
You're just kind of totally giving of yourself to whatever it is, whatever you believe in,
or to helping in a full, wholehearted way.
And the quality is sometimes described in the negative as non-concourt.
clinging. There's just no holding on. There's that open hand that just freely lets this love
and this energy just flow through us. And that is an ecstatic feeling, that kind of generosity.
Because it's not like a self I'm going to give to you. It's just really letting the universe,
the generosity of the universe flow through us. So, an example.
of this one is a story I love about a devoted Zen practitioner. We're back to Zen again. His name is
Tetsugan. And he was a teacher in Japan. He lived in the 1600s. And he decided he was going to publish
the sutras, which are the discourses of the Buddha. And that time, they were only available in Chinese.
So he was going to print them in Japanese. And this was going to take the construction of 60,000 wood blocks
to accomplish it. It takes a lot of donations, so he started traveling and collecting bit by bit
the sum of money he needed. It took a while. A few sympathizers would give him 100 pieces of
gold, but most of the times he only received small coins. But he thanked each donor with
equal gratitude, and after 10 years he had enough money to then begin the task. But it turned out
at that time that the Uji River overflowed and all the crops were ruined.
and famine followed, so Tetsugan took the funds he'd collected for the books and spent them,
of course, to save others from starvation. And then he began the work of collecting again.
In several years, he'd built up again the coffers so he could do the project, but several
years an epidemic spread over the country, and again he gave away what he collected.
He starts for the third time. After 20 years, his wish was fulfilled, and the printing blocks
which produced the first edition of sutras, they can be seen today in the Obaku Monaster in Kyoto.
Now, the Japanese tell their children that Tasugan made three sets of sutras
and that the first two invisible sets surpass even the last.
The first two invisible sets surpass even the last.
There's no greater beauty than this flow of love.
love that we call generosity.
You know, I think that probably every one of us knows the experience of being around a
generous person, that as soon as someone else is generous, our hands seem to open up.
And it's like we want to give back.
It brings out that loving part of us.
I think of it like a fully generous community is a holy community.
I mean, that is the evolutionary potential.
And we can create that.
if each of us in our own lives just leans in that direction.
I have a kind of game I play with myself and it's turned into a game because I sometimes get shocked by it.
But whenever I have a generous thought like, oh, I'm going to give this here or let that person know such and such or whenever it comes to my mind, I have to follow through on it.
So, you know, you never know what's going to come to your mind.
but it's just something that's really been alive for me.
And the reality is wired into all of us.
We just get waylaid.
I sometimes like to read this inquiry that went to children
about love and generosity and marriage and so on
because you get a sense of what's already there,
and this is a kind of follow-up for my earlier story.
There was one question is, well, how do you make someone fall in love with you?
What kind of way of showing care or generosity will make somebody fall in love with you?
I'll read you a few responses.
Tell them you own a whole bunch of candy stores.
Still, age six.
Two, don't do things like having smelly green sneakers.
You might get attention, but attention isn't the same thing as love.
Three, one way is to take a girl out.
to eat. Make sure it's something she likes to eat. French fries usually works for me.
It's Bart, age nine. Just read you a few more of these. This is an expression of love.
I know my older sister loves me because she gives me all her old clothes and has to go
out and buy new ones. And then more on love. There's a question of, okay, so what is it?
Well, a man and a woman promised to go through sickness and illness and diseases together.
Marilyn, age 10.
Then Floyd, age 9, says, love is foolish, but I still might try it sometime.
And the last, when my grandmother got arthritis, she couldn't bend over and paint her toenails anymore.
So my grandfather does it for her all the time, even when his hands got arthritis too.
That's love.
When it's blocked, it takes intention.
There's one woman who was with us for a training some years ago,
and she described her father just, he had that kind of block.
He could not communicate love for his children.
And when her brother was dying of brain cancer,
his wife told her that the only thing missing for her brother
was that his father never tried.
told him he loved him. So she encouraged her father but on his next visit he claimed well the subject
just didn't come up. He had been blocked for a really long time that that flow through. Then she
gets a call and seems her brother's probably going to die in about an hour so she because he's
blind and paralyzed hadn't spoken in a week so she calls her father. She's daddy you have one chance
Jay will probably die today
Please pick up the phone
And tell him that you love him
So here's what she writes
She says and Daddy did just that
He called Jay
And told him that he loved him
And Jay who hadn't spoken for a week
Started talking and talked to Daddy for a half an hour
And Jay didn't even die that day
He rallied and lived for another month
Again you might want to pause
And just close your eyes
Just sends is there a place?
where you felt blocked, where you could just lean a little in the direction of giving
something, some expression of care, to someone where you felt kind of withholding or resentful
or just blah. You might just sense your intention because if the intention is there, that can
open the door. So we're going to close with the practice but I just want to say a few more
words before we end. So in this class I started personally because it's very easy to sense
around us the survival brain in action. I sometimes think of the limbic hijack of our society
and fixate on where the shadow side is, where the cruelty is. And this isn't about turning our
eyes or glazing over or being polyanish. And we need to be really honest with it. And for me,
it meant when it came up two days ago when I was thinking of giving this talk that I just stayed
with it. And I let myself feel the anger and the injustice and the hurting. And then in that
presence, I found that tenderness. So there's two pathways to waking up our heart. And one is to be
absolutely right there, start where we are. And the other is to sense these qualities of
care that we want to cultivate and actively intend to engage. I read that one of the five
pillars of Islamist charity and each year at the end of Ramadan, each household is asked to give
two and a half percent of earnings to the needy. And so I heard this story, this group of poor people
went to the prophet Muhammad's son-in-law and asked him, how could they help others if they had
nothing to give? And he told them they did not have, if they did not have something to give,
he asked them to smile at others and do the best to make sure that everyone whom they encountered
felt cared for.
And I just, when I heard that, I thought, wow,
what if we move through the world with that,
that just whoever you have contact with,
there's some place in you that intends that they feel cared for?
That's generosity.
That is a beautiful expression of it.
So I'd like to have a closing reflection on this.
with you, if you will, and take some moments again to close your eyes and arrive right here,
let yourself come home into the moment. You might take a few long, deep, full breaths.
You might listen again to Mary Oliver and the spirit, I think, of this heart space. She says,
on cold evenings my grandmother, with ownership of half her mind, the other half having
flown back to Bohemia, spread newspapers over the porch floor, so she said the garden
ants could crawl beneath as under a blanket and keep warm.
And what shall I wish for for myself, but being so struck by the lightning of years
to be like her with what is left, that loving?
So you might sense this intention.
in your own language, your own heart language, in some way that whoever you're with,
in some way they may feel cared for, that there may be these heart qualities awake.
You might take some moments to bring to mind the beings in your life, those that you
might be with in the next day or so, and those who are part of your close in circle, those you
work with and take a moment just to let different people come to mind and sense the possibility
of coming into presence and in some way letting them know that they're cared for with your words,
your actions, to take a moment and sense offering that generosity and care inward to any part of you
that needs to be cared for. Just offering a message of care if you'd like to, putting your
on your heart and offering energetically that generosity of tenderness, letting it flow inward.
And sensing yourself, right this moment, listening, practicing with others here and around the
world, sensing our shared heart space with our shared care and prayers that would bring
bring that caring to all in need,
to bring to mind in this heart space
all those in need of company,
of healing,
all those in needs of home, of refuge,
all those in need of safety,
all those humans and non-human beings
that need protection and love,
may they all be held in the loving,
presence that's here, that's boundless, holding all beings in our heart, holding this earth
and all life everywhere in our heart.
May all beings everywhere be filled with loving presence, held in loving presence.
May all beings be safe from inner and outer harm.
May all beings touch the natural joy of being alive.
May all beings everywhere awaken and be free.
Namaste and thanksgiving blessings to all.
For more talks and meditations and to learn about my schedule or join my email list,
please visit tarabrock.com.
